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Economic Development

Farmers slam 'unfair' supermarket buying practices and call for change

A study by Devon vegetable box company Riverford found many growers feel under pressure to accept supermarket terms

People working the fields at Riverford

Stretched farmers are warning over supermarket buying behaviour and say current regulations are "unfit for purpose".

Some 68% of British farmers say making a living through farming has “never been harder” while 69% believe the buying relationship between growers and retailers has deteriorated, according to a study led by Devon-based vegetable box company Riverford.

Almost every farmer surveyed (99%) said they had faced at least one ‘unfair’ practice, including cancelled orders, late payments, and unfavourable, unfair or unprofitable pricing.

Supermarkets rejecting produce over unreasonable demands, such as requiring a specific colour, size or shape, leading to waste or a lower price that does not cover costs, are also cited, as is no notice from buyers for changed terms.

Riverford said this was piling pressure on stretched growers, with 82% of respondents saying unfair supermarket practices were contributing to stress and poor mental health among the farming community.

The industry is calling for a single food supply chain regulator to protect growers and ensure fair treatment by supermarkets, and to address the “power imbalance” between the two.

A survey for the study found 76% of farmers believe the current supply chain regulatory system does not protect farmers from unfair supermarket practices, and is unfit for purpose.

Some 86 MPs have signed an Early Day Motion calling to merge the existing supply chain watchdogs, currently split across two government departments, into one stronger, more effective body.